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4.
Hand Hygiene |
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Introduction The natural flora of the mouth and the bowel has bacterial concentrations up to 10^10 per ml and are significant reservoirs of nosocomial or hospital pathogens. In hospitalised patients, the skin may become colonised with multidrug resistant (MDR) pathogens, and infected wounds and other lesions are also potential sources of cross-infecting organisms. Pathogenic organisms from colonized and infected patients (and sometimes from the environment) transiently contaminate the hands of staff during normal clinical activities and can then be transferred to other patients. Hand transmission is one of the most important methods of spread of infectious agents in health care facilities. Proper hand hygiene is an effective method for preventing the transfer of microbes between staff and patients. The microbial flora of the skin consists of resident and transient microorganisms. Resident organisms (e.g., coagulase negative staphylococci, diphtheroids) survive and multiply in the superficial skin layers. The transient microbial flora of the skin consists of recent contaminants that survive only for a limited period of time. These microorganisms (e.g., S. aureus, E. coli, enterococci) may be acquired by contact with the normal flora or colonised or infected sites of the patient or from the inanimate hospital environment. If the skin of staff members' hands is damaged, the bacterial count on the skin becomes higher. There is also a risk for colonisation with bacteria not normally belonging to the hand flora. Three levels of decontamination of hands are recognized. Social handwashing with plain soap and water removes most transient microorganisms from moderately soiled hands. Hygienic handwashing or disinfection is a procedure where an antiseptic detergent preparation is used for washing or hands are disinfected with alcohol (alcoholic rub). This is a more effective method to remove and kill transient microorganisms. The distinction between the need for social handwashing and hygienic hand washing may not always be clear. A thorough social hand wash may be appropriate if disinfectants are not available. Surgical handwashing is performed with the aim of removing and killing the transient flora and decreasing the resident flora in order to reduce the risk of wound contamination if surgical gloves become damaged. Agents are the same as for the hygienic hand wash. A defined technique for decontamination of hands is probably of greater importance than the agent used. The technique presented in Figure 4.1 is recommended. When to wash hands Social handwashing
Hygienic handwashing or alcoholic rub
An alcoholic hand rub, ideally from a dispenser at the patient's bedside is the most efficient and least time consuming procedure for hand decontamination. Surgical handwashing
Methods Watches and rings reduce hand washing/disinfection effectiveness and should be removed during hand hygiene. Some suggest that they not be worn in patient care. Social hand washing In social hand washing, vigorous and mechanical friction is applied to all surfaces of lathered hands using plain soap and water for at least 10 seconds using a defined technique (Fig. 4.1). The hands are rinsed under a stream of water and dried with paper towel. In the absence of running water, a clean bowl of water should be used. The bowl should be cleaned and water changed between each use. Alternatively, a drum with a drain spout could be elevated to serve as running water. Similarly, in the absence of paper towels, a small clean cloth could be used, but the towel should not be used for extended communal use and should be discarded after each use into a bag designated for laundering and reuse. In places where there is frequent disruption of water supply, water should be stored in large receptacles whenever water is available. The water should be free from infectious agents. Recommended hand wash agents Hygienic hand washing/disinfection Aqueous
Wet hands with clean (running) water or, if not available, from water in a bowl. Apply cleanser (3-5 ml) depending on the product or thoroughly lather with soap. Wash the hands for 10-15 seconds, applying friction over all hand surfaces, rinse and dry as described above. Alcoholic
Apply not less than 3ml of the preparation to the hands and rub to dryness (approximately 30 seconds). Alcohol is more effective than aqueous antiseptic solutions, but a preliminary wash may be needed for physically soiled hands. Alcohol is an effective alternative when there is no water or towels readily available and there is need for rapid hand disinfection. Alcohol products with emollients added will cause less skin irritation and drying to hands (1-3% glycerol). Surgical hand washing/disinfection Agents for surgical hand washing are the same as for the hygienic hand wash. The difference is the time of scrub that is increased to 2-3 min and should include wrists and forearms. If an alcoholic preparation is used, two applications of 5ml each rubbed to dryness are suggested.
Important Points to Note
In areas where gloves are not readily available, latex gloves can be washed with soap and water, dried, powdered, sterilized or high level disinfected and reused. Sterilisation is preferable for surgical procedures. Minimal requirements
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